Without a temperature and pressure, you can't, besides which LPG is usually a liquid until just before use.
1000 litres = 1 cubic metre: of LPG or air or concrete.
No, it's 3.85 litres. This is because LPG is pressurised.
The density of domestic LPG in gaseous form is 2.155 kilograms per cubic meter. Its density in liquid form is 553 kilograms per cubic meter.
1 cubic meter = 264.2 gallons (rounded), regardless of what's in it, or even if it's empty.
1886 kg
1000 litres = 1 cubic metre: of LPG or air or concrete.
No, it's 3.85 litres. This is because LPG is pressurised.
The density of domestic LPG in gaseous form is 2.155 kilograms per cubic meter. Its density in liquid form is 553 kilograms per cubic meter.
1 cubic meter = 264.2 gallons (rounded), regardless of what's in it, or even if it's empty.
1886 kg
There are 1,000 liters of liquid gas in 1 cubic meter of LPG gas. The answer would be different if the conversion is from pressurized volume to unpressurized volume.
1 cubic meter = 1 kiloliter Regardless of what's in it. Even if it's completely empty.
is equal to 0.25445
Yes.
96 Mega Joules
See the related link for a set of conversion tables for the energy industry.According to that table, 1 kg of LPG = 47.0 cubic feet of natural gas.Since 1 short ton = 907.18474 kilogram, we can calculate that 1 ton = 42,637.6828 cubic feet of lpg.
Remember the table for liquid volumes 1000 cm^3 = 1 litre# 1000 litres = 1 m^3 The last line of the table is the answer to your question. =